If there’s one word to sum up Green Onions, the organ-heavy shot of instrumental R&B fire from 1962 by Booker T And The MGs, it’s “strut”. It is simply impossible to do anything else while the song is playing. Booker T is Booker T Jones, one of the true greats of soul music, whose talent helped define the feted Memphis sound of Stax Records. He also forged a creative solo career outside of the label, including working as an arranger and producer. His story is one of driving himself – and many others – into new areas and to greater heights.
“I feel like the same musician I was when I was four or five years old,” Jones said, in 2015, at the age of 68. “I have the same drive, the same creative force is there. I can’t really describe it, it’s just something inside me like a musical player. I hear music playing in my mind, or in my sleep, and my job is to try to control it, or make it practical… to make it something that works in the real world.”
This is the life, the music and the legacy of this timeless soul icon…
Listen to the best of Booker T And The MGs here.
Childhood: “I was thinking about music, always”
“I was born in Memphis, so I was in the garden, and I was around all these figures and influences and musicians, the great traditions of blues and jazz and country,” Jones has said. “That was ingrained in me and my parents and everything else. I was breathing that. It makes a big difference.”
Booker T Jones, named after his father (who was himself named in honour of Booker T Washington, the great American educator), was a child prodigy who played several instruments from a very young age. Jones has written of the psychological joy and physical presence of these instruments in his life. When he obtained his first clarinet, at the age of nine, he described it exquisitely: “the dank smell of the case, the black wood, the beautiful dark green felt that caressed each piece”. He was also thirsty for knowledge and growth in his playing, drinking in music theory, learning the formalities; he would go on to study composition at Indiana University. “I was thinking about music, always,” he wrote in his 2019 memoir, Time Is Tight: My Life.
The young Jones was also close to others who shared his passion: Maurice White, of Earth, Wind And Fire, was a classmate and Isaac Hayes was a friend. “Isaac picked up a lot of his piano [ideas] from me,” Jones said. “Maurice was my first drummer at high school. My mom used to make sandwiches for him.”
Turning pro: “That was my thrill, every day”
“I was in 11th grade, and my friend David Porter knew that Rufus Thomas and his daughter Carla were recording one day,” Thomas said of his first professional gig. “And I guess they had requested a baritone sax part on a song, and David thought of me. David drove over to the high school, came up with some type of hall pass and got me out of class and somehow came up with the band director’s car keys and keys to the instrument room. So down we went to get the baritone sax out of the instrument room and into the borrowed car.”
The song was Cause I Love You, by Rufus and Carla Thomas, and the label it was released on was Satellite Records. This was an imprint based in Memphis, founded in 1957 and owned by siblings Jim Stewart and Estelle Axton. Shortly after the release of this single, Satellite changed its name to Stax – a title soon to become synonymous with the funkiest soul music of all time.